Tag: HornOfAfrica

  • Ts’əmdi and Ts’imdo: Joined for Utility, Not Unity

    Ts’əmdi and Ts’imdo: Joined for Utility, Not Unity

    In the semi-fertile soil of Tigrinya, the words ጽምዲ (Ts’əmdi) and ጽምዶ (Ts’imdo) bloom with layered meaning—practical, poetic, and political. Both conjure the image of two entities alloyed together, yet their applications diverge across the rhythms of life. ጽምዲ, as in ጽምዲ ብዕራይ, refers to two oxen yoked to plough a field—a necessity for poor

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  • Downfall of an Emperor: Haile Selassie of Ethiopia

    Downfall of an Emperor: Haile Selassie of Ethiopia

    Book Review By Semere T Habtemariam Downfall of an Emperor: Haile Selassie of Ethiopia and the Derg’s Creeping Coup By Michael Ghebrenegus Haile (Shambel) Published by AWP | 2024 | 353 pages | Paperback | ISBN: 978-1569024966 First Impressions On a quiet Friday night, I reached for a book that had been waiting on my

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  • Reframing Eritrea’s Post-Independence Paradox

    Reframing Eritrea’s Post-Independence Paradox

    For more than three decades, the story of Eritrea has been told in a narrow and predictable register. It begins with the extraordinary military triumph of 1991, moves quickly to the UN-supervised referendum of 1993, pauses briefly on the promise of constitutional drafting, and then hammers home the familiar conclusion: a descent into authoritarianism and

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  • The Blame Loop Has Expired

    The Blame Loop Has Expired

    Nearly a quarter-century after the ministers of Eritrea were made to disappear into silence on September 18, 2001, a date that split a nation’s hopes, the diagnosis of betrayal has calcified into ritual. In a recent article, Dawit Mesfin revisits this now-familiar script: that President Isaias Afwerki duped not only the Eritrean people but the…

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  • The Disease the Colonizers Left Behind – The River Remembers Series*

    The Disease the Colonizers Left Behind – The River Remembers Series*

    This first entry in The River Remembers series lays the foundation for a postcolonial reckoning across Sudan, Eritrea, Somalia, Djibouti, and Ethiopia. Blending historical analysis, cultural memory, and theoretical insight, the essay examines how different colonial powers left behind not only borders but ways of seeing—and mis-seeing—ourselves. With reference to thinkers like Fanon, Bhabha, and…

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  • Destiny of Conflict, and the Red Sea: A Reflection on Power and People

    Destiny of Conflict, and the Red Sea: A Reflection on Power and People

    ethiopia #eritrea In this commentary, we explore the dangerous rhetoric and provocative actions brewing in the Horn of Africa—from Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s imperial ambitions to the Amhara splinter group ABEN’s rejection of Eritrean sovereignty. * Framed by poetry from Abul Alaa Al Ma’arri and Abul Qasim Al-Shabi, this reflection contrasts fatalism and free will—questions…

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  • Negarit 322: Emergency – A Fresh Cup of Coffee

    Negarit 322: Emergency – A Fresh Cup of Coffee

    A deep dive into Rousseau’s Social Contract and how it applies to the diplomatic impasse between Eritrea and Ethiopia. Why understanding the foundations of justice, negotiation, and power is vital to resolving regional conflict—and why failing to do so is an Aferkebu, an emergency. With cultural reflections, political satire, and critical analysis, this video explores…

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  • Wobbly Thrones of Tyrants and Echoes of Empires

    Wobbly Thrones of Tyrants and Echoes of Empires

    Ancient empires ruled with swords—today’s regimes rule through propaganda, proxies, and fear. From Baathist Iraq to Abiy’s Ethiopia, the playbook of power, deception, and oppression remains the same. This piece reflects on history, misinformation, and the urgent need for genuine national healing in Eritrea and beyond. #Negarit321

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